Thoughtful adventures in the operating system

Color Output on Bash Scripts (Advanced)

I talked in a previous post about basic bash script colored output using the tput command. The tput command works for basic coloring (providing seven colors to choose from) but ANSI also provides a 256 color palette.

Note: Not all terminals support ANSI, but most do.

ANSI color coding is in this form:

\033[01;38;5;160m

The ANSI sequence: {ESC}[{attr};{bg};{256colors};{fg}m

{ESC} or \033 represents the ANSI escape-sequence. {attr} represents the outputs attributes (properties such as blinking and bold text), {fg} is the foreground color, {bg} is the background color, m means the sequence ends.

Note: The escape-sequence \033 works fine but at times you might have to use \e.

An example:

echo -e "My favorite color is \033[38;5;148mYellow-Green\033[39m"

The variable -e is required because echo doesn’t normally interpret backslashes and 033[39m tells bash to end the seqeunce. The 38 Value will use no background color. Notice too that I omitted the attribution value which if isn’t used will use the default (regular text) value.

Colortest will show the ANSI color value to the corresponding hex value. Then just insert the ANSI value into the either the foreground or background value.
There’s also a program called conv-rgb2xterm that a hex value can be put in and it will give and ANSI sequence for the foreground color.

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Here is a gathering place to share common bits of Linux knowledge. Learning with the operating system is a hobby for me. I enjoy getting along with people and being part of something everyone can contribute to. Comments, tips all liked.

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